RubyMine 2017.3 Help

Keymap:

Using TextMate Bundles

The following is only valid when TextMate Bundles Support Plugin is installed and enabled!

What this tutorial is about

Projects can contain file types unknown to RubyMine. While RubyMine comes with the built-in support for many programming and scripting languages, you might want to have syntax highlighting for the project-specific languages. For example, a project can contain a shell script, or Perl; a configuration file can exist in a project for the infrastructure automation purposes. If you want to have syntax highlighting for these cases, use the powerful RubyMine's integration with the text editor TextMate.

This tutorial aims to walk you step by step through configuring RubyMine to use the TextMate Bundles, and editing files with the registered extensions.

Learning TextMate is out of scope of this tutorial. For information about TextMate, refer to the product documentation.

Prerequisites

Make sure that:

You have already downloaded bundles you want to use. You can, for example, find the bundles you want to install on GitHub or Subversion.

You are working with RubyMine 6.0 (where TextMate Bundles has been supported) or higher. In this tutorial, RubyMine 2016.1 is used.

Importing bundles

Suppose you want RubyMine to highlight syntax of the Shell Script files. For this purpose, you have already downloaded the Shell Script TextMate Bundle. It now resides on your hard disk, and you only have to import this bundle into RubyMine.

OK, off we go. On the main toolbar, click , and under the Editor node, click TextMate Bundles. Then, in the TextMate Bundles area, click , and locate the desired bundle on your hard disk:

Click OK to apply changes. The Shell Script bundle appears in the list of recognized bundles, and its local path is visible to the right:

However, we have not yet defined which color scheme RubyMine will use to highlight Shell Script syntax. As you already know, RubyMine provides a number of color schemes, from the classic-looking ones to the fashionable dark schemes, like Darcula. Have a look at the color scheme mapping section in the lower part of the TextMate Bundles page. By default, the RubyMine's Default color scheme maps to the Mac Classic. If we want to use a different color scheme for our bundle, we can click the "Mac Classic" cell in the table of mappings, and select the desired scheme from the list of available ones. However, let's stick to the suggested scheme:

If you want to use a custom TextMate color scheme, you can import a TextMate bundle with schemes, and it will become visible in the list of TextMate color schemes after clicking Apply:

Extension conflicts

Suppose you've imported a bundle that runs into a conflict with the existing file types. The conflict is immediately reported:

Clicking the Show details link opens the dialog box that gives you the chance to unregister the required extensions from the native file types:

The node Files supported via TextMate Bundles now shows the new extensions (.htm, .html), and the node HTML lacks these extensions:

Testing

Once a TextMate bundle is added, RubyMine provides syntax highlighting for the file types registered with the bundle. Here's a sample script that uses the Shell Script TextMate bundle we've cloned earlier: